coolio2654 (post: 1478406) wrote:The characters celebrate Christmas, there are crosses literally everywhere if you look hard enough, some protagonists are seen praying, a main protagonist is a clergyman who uses the words (I quote), "In the name of the Father, the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." You all well know probably that shows tend to ignore religions as controversial, but this is pretty out in the open, though I don't see a definite answer on the state of religion in this show.
I've seen
one episode of
Soul Eater, so I can't comment on the show specifically. But I can comment on some of the ideas your brought up as they have to do with anime.
As some have mentioned, it's likely that the symbols are used in the series as they are in others - without really any regard for the faith. Christianity conveys a cool and mysterious tone to many Japanese, and so the symbols are often employed. Even if you look at a show like Evangelion, which is as full of Christian and other religious symbols as can be, you find a lack of meaning.
As for crosses, I would assume that they're part of that whole tone the show wants to convey. Crosses (and crucifixion) are
common in anime, and crosses were used for crucifixion in the country, so the Japanese should be familiar with the symbol.
Falx (post: 1478438) wrote:Really I wouldn't look for real Christian values in any anime series no matter how much of the symbolism is in a show. There are only two explicitly Christian series that I know of and they are SuperBook and Flying House. If you see something that is a biblical value or moral in anything else... it's by accident not design. Enjoy it and don't try to look to deep in the rest of the series as you'll either end up confused or disappointed.
I don't necessarily agree with Falx in saying that you shouldn't look for depth in Christian themes and symbols in a series. A show, like any piece of media, can portray Christian values without being specifically Christian.
Haibane Renmei does this, in addition to having pretty obvious Christian imagery, though the creator has said that he wasn't specifically channeling Christian (specifically Catholic) ideas into the series. Madoka Magica, likewise, has similar motifs, though in this case, I think the show's creator knew what he was doing (certainly the airing of the final episode on Good Friday was a tip-off), though
Buddhism may have weighed more strongly on his mind.
On another note, there's at least one other specifically Christian anime -
In the Beginning, which had its start when the Vatican asked Osamu Tezuka to create a film based on the OT.